Surviving Witness Breaks Silence: “I Still Hear Yu Menglong’s Pleas in My Nightmares”
More than five months have passed since the fateful night of September 10, 2025, when popular Chinese actor Yu Menglong (also known as Alan Yu) was found dead after falling from a high floor at the Sunshine Upper East residential complex in Beijing. Authorities quickly ruled it an accidental death due to alcohol intoxication, closing the case and excluding any criminal elements. Yet cracks in the official narrative continue to widen, fueled by the emergence of a key eyewitness—the sole surviving waiter from that private gathering—who can no longer carry the burden of silence.

Tears streamed down the face of the middle-aged man, who had been hired temporarily to serve at the exclusive party attended by more than a dozen influential figures from entertainment and business circles. Known in some online leaks as “Shaoli,” he had buried the horror for months out of sheer fear. But guilt finally forced him to speak in a private interview with an independent media outlet. “I can’t sleep anymore,” he whispered. “Every night, I hear the shatter of glass, the flow of blood, and his desperate begging. Those screams still echo—and now they’re echoing in the nightmares of millions.”
According to Shaoli’s chilling account, the evening began like many lavish gatherings: laughter, clinking glasses, and an air of glamour masking darker undercurrents. Yu Menglong, the 37-year-old actor beloved for his refined looks and roles in hit costume dramas like Eternal Love, arrived quietly and drank sparingly at first. But pressure mounted quickly. He was forced to down drinks, pulled into “games” that were little more than systematic humiliation.
The turning point came when a bottle smashed against his skull. Blood poured from gashes on his forehead and temple. He collapsed to the floor, clutching his head, gasping pleas: “Stop… please, have mercy… I can’t take it anymore.” Instead of aid, the room erupted in louder laughter, treating the scene as entertainment. Shaoli described Yu Menglong crawling on his knees across the blood-smeared floor, reaching toward strangers for any shred of compassion. None came. His cries faded into the music and raucous cheers.
“I stood there holding a tray, frozen,” Shaoli recounted. “I wanted to help, but a tall man dragged me into the kitchen and warned, ‘Do you want to end up like him?’ I bowed my head and pretended to work. But that image haunts me forever.” Afterward, he said, Yu was dragged from the room, screams echoing down the hallway. The next morning, his body was discovered below the building—officially deemed an “accident.”
These details align partially with leaked autopsy fragments circulating online, revealing pre-fall injuries: skull fractures, nearly all lower teeth missing, genital trauma suggesting sexual assault, and blunt-force wounds inconsistent with a simple fall. Despite Beijing police insisting no foul play, public outrage has exploded, with millions demanding a reopened investigation. How could a top star with over 25 million followers suddenly “fall drunk from a building”?
Shaoli says he spoke out because “I can’t let his soul suffer injustice.” He claims threats followed his initial anonymous posts on hidden forums. “I’m terrified, but staying silent makes me no different from those who watched and did nothing,” he said. The waiter’s whispered confession now spreads like wildfire, keeping millions awake, haunted by the question: What really happened that night?
The full account of the surviving witness’s testimony and suppressed details continues to circulate widely. Was it truly an accident, or a darker tragedy being buried? The public awaits real answers.
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